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Chapter no 32 – NATHANIEL

In the Likely Event

Fort Bragg, North Carolina September 2021

I took a deep breath as I stood in the empty hallway, facing the door Iโ€™d been scheduled to walk through for the past two weeks. Foolishly, Iโ€™d thought making the initial call would be the hardest, but it wasnโ€™t. Standing here, staring at the clinical letters beside the door, deciding whether or not to turn the handle, was infinitely harder.

The clinic didnโ€™t have that oversanitized smell that came with hospitals, but weโ€™d never been seen by typical doctors either.

โ€œYou can do it,โ€ Torres said from my left.

โ€œIf I do, itโ€™s over,โ€ I replied, keeping my voice low. โ€œYou know theyโ€™ll kick me out of the unit.โ€

โ€œYeah. And then maybe youโ€™ll start living for you. Get some help for those nightmares, too, so youโ€™re not terrified to sleep next to your girl. Youโ€™re not your dad. Youโ€™re never going to be your dad. But still . . . you need the help. You should probably figure out what to do with that farm of yours.โ€

I glanced over at him, my hand reaching for the doorknob.

โ€œYou gotta let go, Nate,โ€ he said, offering me a smile. โ€œYouโ€™ve carried shit that isnโ€™t yours for too long. That guilt? Not yours. The career youโ€™re not actually that fond of? Not yours. But Izzy? Sheโ€™s the one whoโ€™s yours. So if you wonโ€™t walk through that door for yourself, consider doing it for her.โ€

Izzy.

It had been six weeks since Iโ€™d left her at the Kabul airport so I could give her the one thing I knew she neededโ€”Serena. I missed her with every breath, and yet I knew it wasnโ€™t time yet.

If we had one shot, then I couldnโ€™t blow it.

I took one last look at Torres and then I opened the door and walked through.

Dr. Williamson looked up from his desk with a professional smile and motioned to the chairs in front of his desk. โ€œHowโ€™s it going, Phelan?โ€

Usually I would have told him I was fine. That I was sleeping, eating, and relaxing just like I was supposed to.

But lying hadnโ€™t gotten me anywhere, so maybe it was time that I told the truth.

I sank into the chair and looked the doctor in the eye. โ€œIโ€™ve been talking to my best friend as a coping mechanism for the stress, the deployments, the . . . everything.โ€

He nodded, leaning back in his chair. โ€œThat sounds pretty normal.โ€

โ€œYeah, except heโ€™s been dead for four years. Think you can help me?โ€ I gripped my knees and waited for his answer.

โ€œYes,โ€ he said. โ€œI think I can help you.โ€

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